SectorOne wrote:Anyone caught Webber´s stop with the camera pointed backwards?
Buckled as he´s coming in, they lift him up then drop him and the stay buckled quite severely.
It definitely looks like it´s connected to the suspension load rather then just the floor hitting the ground but i could be wrong.
=D> =D> great shot indeed, it is clear that when you look at where the lower wishbone connects to the tub, when the car hits the floor [and thus the suspension comes into motion/under load/pressure], there is a clear transfer of load to the stay - undoubtedly they must be connected in some way.
If my eyes aren't playing tricks, it looks like the stay seems to 'get bent' just around halfway vertical, and indeed, the stay seems to change its 'direction of bending'. Which could suggest that there is some sort of mechanism as to where both [lower] wishbones transfer motion from the suspension onto the stay, in other words, the stay bends to the direction most pressure is being generated - thus would work when the car is turning left, AND would work when the car is turning right,
undoubtedly improving cornering aerodynamics.
Since I believe mechanical or interlinked fysical contact as a mechanism would be a breach of the rules, there could be a hidden air pressure system there - where perhaps the movement of the wishbones connecting into the tub generates enough pressure to bend the stay [like your average houshold bycicle tire pump generates pressure]
thus heating up the t-tray [FIA legality test] will have zero effect, because the t-tray will only move when the stay is under pressure, and the front section of the t-tray as discussed before might consist of e 'flexible' material where it is able to flex upwards.
Then no matter how much pressure is put to the t-tray in a test, as long as the stay is in place, and no [specific] load is put into the stay because the suspension isn't under load, then they will pass scrutineering and thus get a thumbs up as a car that is not proved 'illegal' [which essentially doesn't mean the car is legal, they just can't prove it's illegal].